The Great Decoupling: Why Impressions Are Up But Clicks Are Down

The old assumption that more impressions means more clicks no longer holds.

Ahrefs identified a new trend they call ‘The Great Decoupling’ — search impressions and clicks, once positively correlated, have flipped to a negative correlation. Here’s what’s behind it.

Publicado el : Marzo, 12 2026 Autora : William Scotia 3 min read

Something broke in the relationship between impressions and clicks.

Ahrefs tracked it and gave it a name: “The Great Decoupling.”

In late 2024, daily search impressions and clicks had a positive correlation of 0.425. That makes intuitive sense — more impressions should mean more clicks. More people seeing your listing, more people clicking on it.

By mid-2025, that correlation had flipped to -0.352. Negative. More impressions, fewer clicks.

Sites are getting seen more and clicked less. That’s not how search is supposed to work. But it’s how search works now.

What’s driving the split.

The March 2025 core update appears to be the inflection point. After that update, AI Overview presence in search results more than doubled — a 116% increase. When an AI Overview appears at the top of a search results page, it answers the query directly. The user gets what they need without clicking on anything.

Your listing still shows up. Google still counts it as an impression. But the click never comes.

This creates a distortion in your Search Console data. You might look at your impressions graph and think things are going well. They’re trending up. But if you check your clicks, they’re flat or declining. The two metrics that used to move together are now moving apart.

Why this matters more than the raw numbers suggest.

When impressions inflate but clicks drop, something important changes: the CTR for every position on the page goes down. Not because your listing got worse, but because there’s a new element on the page absorbing attention before users reach the organic results.

The average CTR benchmarks you’ve been using are stale. Position #1 doesn’t get the same click share it got a year ago. Neither does position #2 or #3. The whole curve has shifted downward for queries where AI Overviews appear.

The differentiator is the click itself.

Here’s where this gets interesting. In a world where most search results pages generate fewer clicks, a page that actually earns a click stands out more. The click signal becomes more distinctive, not less.

Think of it this way: if everyone in a room is talking, one voice doesn’t carry much weight. But if the room gets quieter, the same voice suddenly matters a lot more. That’s what’s happening with clicks. As the total click pool shrinks per query, each individual click carries more signal.

Google’s own systems confirm this. NavBoost processes click-and-query data on a rolling 13-month basis. When fewer clicks happen per query, the clicks that do happen get proportionally more influence on rankings.

The practical takeaway.

The Great Decoupling means you can’t rely on impressions as a proxy for performance anymore. Clicks are the metric that matters, and earning them requires a more deliberate strategy.

That’s where CTR optimization fits. When real humans search for your keyword and click on your listing, they’re adding to your click signal in an environment where clicks are scarce and valuable. SerpClix exists precisely for this scenario — generating real clicks from real people to feed the engagement data Google’s ranking systems rely on.

Impressions are vanity. Clicks are the signal.


SerpClix uses an army of over 400,000 real human clickers to boost your organic CTR. Get started with a free trial or log in to your dashboard to set up your next click order.

Tenga en cuenta que no existen garantías en la optimización de motores de búsqueda. Hay innumerables factores que pueden afectar las clasificaciones de los motores de búsqueda y, siendo realistas, la mayoría de los sitios deberían centrar sus esfuerzos en el SEO tradicional antes de pensar siquiera en utilizar técnicas no tradicionales como SerpClix. Todos los esfuerzos de SEO pueden implicar un elemento de riesgo. Algunas técnicas son ciertamente más riesgosas que otras. SerpClix emplea clickers humanos reales, por lo que creemos que nuestro servicio es mucho menos riesgoso que intentar utilizar métodos de clics automatizados o robóticos. Pero, como todas las estrategias de SEO, existe un elemento de riesgo porque el algoritmo de Google es desconocido y está sujeto a cambios en cualquier momento. Para obtener más información, consulte nuestras Preguntas frecuentes para compradores.

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